Beaufort, colonial seaport town, seat of Carteret county, southeastern North Carolina, U.S. It lies opposite Morehead City on Beaufort Harbor (there bridged) and is linked to the Atlantic Ocean by Beaufort Inlet, which there, between Bogue and Shackleford banks, receives the Newport River. Laid out in 1715 on the site of a Native American village (Wareiock), it was incorporated in 1723 and named for Henry Somerset, 2nd duke of Beaufort (1684–1714). Many colonial houses remain along narrow oak-lined streets, and the town’s Old Burying Ground has interesting colonial markers. Beaufort Harbor was the base of the pirate Blackbeard (Edward Teach) and his ship Queen Anne’s Revenge. In 1862, during the American Civil War, the town was occupied by Union troops when they captured Fort Macon in Beaufort Inlet; a state park now preserves the site.

Tourism is an economic mainstay. Fish meal is a leading product, and there is some boat building and lumber milling. The North Carolina Maritime Museum features exhibits on maritime history. Nearby are Cape Lookout National Seashore on the barrier islands to the east and Croatan National Forest to the northwest. Pop. (2000) 3,771; (2010) 4,039.

Cape Lookout National Seashore, eastern North Carolina.

BrianDBell

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constituent state of the United States of America. One of the 13 original states, it lies on the Atlantic coast midway between New York and Florida and is bounded to the north by Virginia, to the east by the Atlantic Ocean, to the south by South Carolina and Georgia, and to the west by Tennessee....

town, seaport resort, Carteret county, eastern North Carolina, U.S. It lies on Bogue Sound (there receiving the Newport River) and on the Intracoastal Waterway opposite Beaufort, to which it is bridged. In 1853 John Motley Morehead, governor of North Carolina (1841–45), purchased land on the...